Now don't get me wrong, I do feel a bit for the plight of local newspapers, and especially their (ever diminishing number of) journalists. But has the barrel actually been entirely scraped away already?

Look forward to more "non stories" - which, as I've said, also often seem to be little PR-push pieces.

As an experiment I closed all applications and ran Wireshark (IP tool to look at all internet traffic)I just loaded Wales on Line home page, 118 separate IP addresses were accessed and over 20 individual cookies were placed on my machine.No wonder they don't have room for News any more!

An article on a £1.85 per bag charge for additional refuse bags from Cardiff Council. Now one can argue about the merits and fairness of the policy (and perhaps suggest a few spare bags be included in the packs), but is the journo stupid? Or does she know she's speaking distorted nonsense but wants to hype the story and thinks her readers are stupid (probably many are actually).

Its not £1.85 per bag for THE BAG.. the charge is, in effect, for the collection of additional waste. The council is now charged £80+ a tonne for waste to landfill under the Landfill Tax, and will soon face even higher penalties under EU rules on landfill, and so wants to reduce landfill at a time its budget is facing huge cuts. It is trying to manage demand by charging people who use more than 1.5 bag per fortnight.

So comparison with the price of bags elsewhere is just stupid. Do Tesco also collect your rubbish when you buy their value bags? Hrm...

They wouldn't get away with it though if the council hadn't made a total pig's ear of rolling out the new system. The lack of consultation and misassesment of people's actual needs must be like manna from heaven for journalists trying to fill newspapers in the silly season.

I'm not one of the people effected by the changes but delivering large garden waste bins to appartments without gardens and then asking the residents to contact the council if they don't need them is just plain daft.

They wouldn't get away with it though if the council hadn't made a total pig's ear of rolling out the new system. The lack of consultation and misassesment of people's actual needs must be like manna from heaven for journalists trying to fill newspapers in the silly season.

I'm not one of the people effected by the changes but delivering large garden waste bins to appartments without gardens and then asking the residents to contact the council if they don't need them is just plain daft.

Then again if they made people ring-up and ask for green bins the hacks would be out making-up stories about how this was some great injustice.

Personally I'm still waiting for Cardiff to join the likes of Penarth and Barry in having its own newspaper online, I don't care whether Farmer Jones from Cwmystwyth lost his flipping house keys in a mildly amusing way or not.

A potentially interesting interview with a senior property executive (who happens to be Welsh) on the global situation, with a few links to the local situation. BUT - the journalist has butchered it. The headline is misleading (he doesn't seem to mention the city region issue); the copy and quotes don't align properly. I mean, its amateurish and embarrassing.

MediaWales's main papers, the Echo, and Western Mail, have never been great. But now they are a mess. Their team now only occupy perhaps 2 floors of their building (out of 6), suggesting staff numbers have been cut to the bone. So perhaps I'm being harsh on the guy who wrote the article - perhaps he's just overworked and worn out!